MRT Hacks for Getting Around Singapore Faster
Everything I wish someone had told me before my first trip — from door-to-door timings to the best platform spots for a fast exit.
I’ll be honest — the first time I stepped off a plane at Changi Airport and navigated my way into the city on the MRT, I was completely clueless. I stood in front of the ticket machine for an embarrassingly long time, stared at the wrong platform, and — in a moment I prefer not to dwell on — boarded a train going in exactly the wrong direction. Singapore’s MRT is genuinely one of the best metro systems in the world, but like any metro, it rewards the people who know its unwritten rules. After multiple trips, I’ve picked up enough tips to make every ride smooth, fast, and even a little satisfying. Here’s everything I know.
First Things First: The EZ-Link Card
Before you do anything else — before you even think about which line you need — get yourself an EZ-Link card. I can’t stress this enough. Buying a single-trip ticket every time you travel is slow, costs more per trip, and means you’re always hunting for loose change or queuing at a machine. The EZ-Link card is a contactless stored-value card that works across the entire MRT network, all Singapore buses, and even some taxis and retail shops.
🃏 EZ-Link Card
Available at all MRT customer service counters and 7-Eleven stores. Costs S$12 — S$5 is a non-refundable card fee and S$7 is stored credit. Top up at any General Ticketing Machine (GTM), AXS station, or 7-Eleven.
📱 SimplyGo (Bank Cards / Apple Pay)
Singapore’s SimplyGo system lets you tap in and out with a contactless Mastercard or Visa — no separate card needed. Works for tourists too, if your card supports contactless payments. Fares are slightly higher than EZ-Link.
If you’re visiting for more than 3–4 days, the Singapore Tourist Pass gives you unlimited MRT and bus rides for 1, 2, or 3 days at a flat rate (around S$22–28). It pays for itself quickly if you’re hopping between attractions.
Understanding the Network in 2 Minutes
Singapore’s MRT has six lines. You don’t need to memorise them all, but knowing their colours and coverage area saves enormous amounts of time when planning a route. Here’s my cheat sheet:
| Line | Code | Colour | Key Stops for Tourists | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NS North–South | NSL | Red | Orchard, City Hall, Raffles Place, Jurong East | 2–3 min |
| EW East–West | EWL | Green | Bugis, Chinatown, Tanjong Pagar, Changi Airport | 2–4 min |
| NE North–East | NEL | Purple | Little India, Clarke Quay, HarbourFront, Chinatown | 3–5 min |
| CC Circle | CCL | Orange | Botanic Gardens, Marina Bay, Esplanade, Dhoby Ghaut | 4–6 min |
| DT Downtown | DTL | Blue | Bugis, Little India, Chinatown, Marina Bay Sands | 4–7 min |
| TE Thomson–East Coast | TEL | Brown | Woodlands, Stevens, Gardens by the Bay, East Coast | 4–6 min |
My biggest time-saver: always check which line serves your destination before heading to the station. Some areas like Chinatown are served by three separate lines (EWL, NEL, DTL), and the right line can save you one or two transfers.
The 10 MRT Hacks I Actually Use
Board at the Right Door
Look for yellow arrows on the platform floor showing where the carriage doors stop. Standing there means you board and exit faster every single time.
Know Which End of the Train to Board
Most stations have maps showing which exit is at which end of the platform. Board the carriage nearest your exit before you even board the train.
Travel Off-Peak for Cheaper Fares
Travelling before 7:45am on weekdays earns you a 50-cent rebate on your next journey. It’s small, but it adds up across a whole trip.
Use Google Maps for Real-Time Routing
Google Maps Singapore is surprisingly accurate — it’ll tell you which platform, how many stops, and when your train leaves. Always use it in unfamiliar areas.
The MyTransport.SG App
Singapore’s official transport app shows live bus arrival times and fare calculators. Essential if you’re combining MRT with buses to reach your final destination.
Skip Dhoby Ghaut at Peak Hour
This is one of the busiest interchange stations in Singapore. If you can, reroute through City Hall or Outram Park to avoid the crush on weekday evenings.
Hack #7: The “Reverse Direction” Trick
This one took me two trips to figure out. Some stations have separate platforms for each direction — but others are through-platforms where trains arrive on the same platform going different ways. At these stations, make absolutely sure you check the destination board on the front of the train, not just the platform sign. I’ve wasted 20 minutes going the wrong way more than once.
Hack #8: Use Interchanges as Shortcuts
Singapore’s interchange stations connect multiple lines and are often linked to massive underground malls or covered walkways. City Hall and Raffles Place are directly connected underground — you can essentially walk between them without tapping out. Similarly, Bugis connects the EWL and DTL, and the underground passage to Bugis Junction is a climate-controlled blessing on a hot day.
Hack #9: Fare Zones — Pay Less by Thinking Ahead
MRT fares in Singapore are distance-based. This means that sometimes taking a slightly longer route via a different line actually costs less, because of how fare zones are calculated. Here’s a quick comparison of some common tourist routes and their approximate fares:
| Route | Direct Path | Approx. Fare | Time | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Changi Airport → Orchard | EWL → NSL (Tanah Merah / City Hall) | S$2.10 – S$2.30 | ~45 min | Speed |
| Little India → Marina Bay Sands | NEL → CCL (Dhoby Ghaut / Bayfront) | S$1.40 – S$1.60 | ~25 min | Value |
| Bugis → Gardens by the Bay | DTL → TEL (Bayfront / Gardens) | S$1.40 – S$1.60 | ~20 min | Speed |
| Orchard → HarbourFront (VivoCity) | NSL → NEL (Outram Park) | S$1.50 – S$1.70 | ~25 min | Convenience |
| Chinatown → Jewel Changi | NEL/EWL → EWL Airport branch | S$2.00 – S$2.20 | ~40 min | Plan Ahead |
| Clarke Quay → Sentosa | NEL → EWL → Sentosa Express | S$2.00 + S$4 Sentosa levy | ~35 min | Budget |
Fares above are approximate adult EZ-Link fares as of 2024–2025. Always verify on the TransitLink fare calculator for exact pricing, especially after any fare revisions.
Hack #10: The Weekend Night Owl Service
Singapore’s MRT doesn’t run 24 hours on weekdays — but it does run extended services on Friday and Saturday nights, continuing until around 2am. On those nights, you can stay out for dinner and drinks at Clarke Quay or the CBD and still get back to your hotel without needing an (expensive) Grab. Check the LTA website for the latest Night Owl service schedule before you go out.
Peak vs Off-Peak: When to Ride
Timing your journeys matters more than most people realise. Here’s a simple breakdown of what to expect throughout the day:
| Time of Day | Weekday Crowds | Weekends | My Advice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before 7:45am | Moderate → building up | Very quiet | Best time — 50¢ off-peak rebate on weekdays! |
| 7:45am – 9:30am | Packed (rush hour) | Quiet | Avoid if you’re not in a hurry |
| 9:30am – 4:30pm | Comfortable | Moderate | Ideal for sightseeing |
| 4:30pm – 7:30pm | Very crowded | Moderate–busy | Be patient, skip Dhoby Ghaut |
| 7:30pm – closing | Light | Light–moderate | Pleasant — enjoy the journey |
Etiquette That Will Make Your Life Easier
Singapore takes its public transport etiquette seriously — there are actual signs and announcements about this. But beyond the rules, following the local customs just makes everything faster:
- Stand on the left of escalators. The right lane is for walking. Blocking it will earn you icy stares.
- Let people exit before you board. This is enforced, not just expected — yellow lines mark where to stand while waiting.
- No eating or drinking on the MRT. The fine is S$500. Singaporeans take this very seriously and so should you.
- Priority seats are for the elderly, pregnant women, and people with disabilities. Getting up without being asked is considered the normal, polite thing to do.
- Keep your voice down. Loud phone calls attract disapproval. Earphones are near-universal.
The last carriage (or first, depending on direction) is often the least crowded at major stations — most people rush for the middle carriages. At interchange stations like Raffles Place and Dhoby Ghaut, walking to the end of the platform can mean getting a seat.
Getting to Sentosa via MRT
Sentosa deserves its own section because the routing confuses so many visitors. You cannot get to Sentosa on the main MRT alone — you need to connect to the Sentosa Express monorail, which departs from VivoCity mall at HarbourFront station. Here’s the step-by-step:
| Step | What to Do | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Take the NEL or CCL to HarbourFront station | Regular MRT fare |
| 2 | Exit into VivoCity mall (Level 3) | Free |
| 3 | Board the Sentosa Express monorail | S$4 (includes Sentosa entry levy) |
| 4 | Alight at Beach Station, Waterfront, or Imbiah | Included above |
Alternatively, if you’re feeling energetic (and it’s not peak afternoon heat), you can walk across Sentosa Boardwalk from VivoCity for free. It takes about 15–20 minutes and is a lovely walk in the early morning.
Apps You Need on Your Phone
These four apps will collectively eliminate almost every source of confusion when riding the MRT:
| App | Platform | Best For | Must-Have? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google Maps | iOS / Android | Door-to-door routing with live train times | Essential |
| MyTransport.SG | iOS / Android | Bus + MRT real-time info, fare calculator | Essential |
| Grab | iOS / Android | Backup transport when MRT doesn’t quite reach your destination | Recommended |
| EZ-Link app | iOS / Android | Top up your card remotely, check balance | Recommended |
My Favourite MRT-Accessible Spots
One of the beautiful things about Singapore is that virtually every major attraction is a short walk from an MRT station. Here are my personal favourites and exactly where to alight:
| Destination | Nearest Station | Line | Walk Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gardens by the Bay | Gardens by the Bay | TE TEL | 2 min |
| Marina Bay Sands | Bayfront | CC / DT | 5 min |
| Orchard Road Shopping | Orchard / Somerset | NS NSL | 2 min |
| Chinatown Heritage Centre | Chinatown | NE / EW / DT | 3 min |
| Little India / Mustafa | Little India | NE / DT | 5 min |
| Singapore Zoo / Night Safari | Mandai Khatib | NS NSL + shuttle bus | 20 min (bus) |
| Jewel Changi Airport | Changi Airport | EW EWL | 5 min walk inside |
Final Thoughts: The MRT Is Genuinely Brilliant
After all my trips to Singapore, I’ve come to genuinely love the MRT. It’s fast, it’s cool (literally — the air-conditioning is a gift), and it connects almost everywhere you’d want to go. The hacks above aren’t really about finding shortcuts in a broken system — they’re about getting the most out of a system that actually works extremely well once you understand its logic.
My top three takeaways if you remember nothing else: get an EZ-Link card the moment you land, download Google Maps and MyTransport.SG before you leave your hotel each morning, and always check the destination board on the front of the train before you step on. Do those three things and you’ll navigate Singapore like a local from day one.
Have you found any MRT tricks I’ve missed? Drop them in the comments below — I’m always looking to add to this list for future trips!




